It's about one-three-hundred-fiftieth the number of Seats in Fenway Park.

In other words, 110 is 0.0029673 times the count of Seats in Fenway Park, and the count of Seats in Fenway Park is 337.01 times that amount.

(2013 figures; daytime capacity) (a.k.a. The Cathedral of Boston) (Boston, Massachusetts)
Fenway Park, the home of the Boston Red Sox baseball team, can accommodate 37,071 spectators when configured for daytime seating. Fenway Park holds the record for most consecutive sellout games, with a streak of 794 sellouts that ended in 2013. This figure is a dramatic turnaround from the attendance in 1965, which was at times as low as just 500 people.

(a.k.a. The Coliseum, a.k.a. Flavian Amphitheatre, a.k.a. Amphitheatrum Flavium, a.k.a. Anfiteatro Flavio or Colosseo) (Rome) (estimated)
Built between 70 and 80 AD, The Colosseum was a central attraction of Rome, capable of seating 50,000 spectators for various events including plays, war reenactments, and gladiatorial matches. The structure was estimated to require 100,000 cu. m of stone to construct. It remains the largest amphitheater in the world.

It's about one-five-thousand-five-hundredth the number of Words in War and Peace.

In other words, 110 is 0.000187302 times the count of Words in War and Peace, and the count of Words in War and Peace is 5,338.97 times that amount.

(1869) (1968 Ann Dunnigan translation, New American Library)First published in 1869, Leo Tolstoy\'s Tzarist Russian epic, War and Peace contains 587,287 words (in one of the popular English translations). The novel is the seventh-longest novel ever written in a Latin or Cyrillic alphabets.

It's about one-twenty-five-thousandth the number of ATMs in the World.

In other words, the count of ATMs in the World is 30,000 times 110.

(2015 figures) (approximate)
There are approximately 3 million ATMs in the world, including sites in Antarctica, cruise ships, US Navy ships, and Tibet. ATM's typically hold between $20,000 and $100,000, depending on the size of the crowds where they're located.